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Internet Grammar

More Misused, Abused, Mangled, and Otherwise Commonly Violated Words

accept, v. to willingly receive or agree with
except, prep., conj., v. not included, singled out (e.g., the actors were good except one), to exclude
access, v., adj. to reach; reachable (e.g., access panel in the wall), from accessible
assess, v. to evaluate, judge or take stock
affect, v. to change, to have an impact
effect, n., v. result, to produce a result (e.g., effected the improvement)
airing, v. to air (out) as in a blanket or complaint
erring, v. to make a mistake or error, from to err
allusive, adj. in reference to, from "allude"
elusive, adj. hard to grasp, from "elude"
illusive, adj. something that illustrates
altar, n. a raised platform as in a church
alter, v. to modify
"another think coming" need to reconsider
"another thing coming" probably incorrect or at best a variant for "another think coming"
apostrophe usage correctly used for contractions (e.g., you're) or to indicate possession (e.g., Jane's car); other uses are controversial -- as in with numbers, dates, lists, etc.
aspiration, n., v. goal, or act of inhaling (e.g., he aspirated the vomit)
inspirations, n., v. from inspire; something which motivates, or, rarely, to breathe in
baited, adj., v. a trap or hook with bait; or past tense of to bait (attracting an animal or targeted person)
bated, adj. held back, as in bated breath, from to abate
born, v. to give birth, to arise from
borne, v. to carry, to endure
breath, n. the air drawn into or exhaled from lungs
breathe, v. to draw in or exhale air
casual, adj. informal (e.g., casual clothing for the picnic)
causal, adj. causing (e.g., rain was a causal factor in the accident)
chock, v. British, to strangle
choke, v. to strangle
cite, v. to reference (he cited the quotation's source) or to give a citation (the cop cited him for double-parking)
sight, n. vision (e.g., he lost his sight in the explosion) or an image (e.g., she was quite a sight after the party)
site, n. location (e.g., the building site)
cloth, n. fabric
clothe, v. to dress
compliment, v. or n. to favorably comment; a favorable comment
complement, v. or n. to enhance or fit (the jewelry complements the outfit); or, portion (the full complement of soldiers); the thing which enhances or fits or is a portion
credible, adj. believable (a credible story)
creditable, adj. worthy of receiving credit (a creditable theory) (near-synonymous with credible)
definite, adj. certain
defiant, adj. resistant, rebellious
defuse, v. to remove the fuse from (e.g., from explosives or, metaphorically, a tense situation)
diffuse, v. or adj. to scatter, dilute; scattered, diluted; often misused in place of "defuse"
dessert, n. last dish of a meal, usually sweet
desert, n. arid land
faze, adj. taken aback, brought up short (e.g., he wasn't fazed by her objection)
phase, n. one step of a multi-step process (e.g., the first phase of the moon shot)
flair, adj. style or talent (e.g., she had a flair for decorating)
flare, v. to suddenly brighten or heat up (e.g., the fire flared when he poured on gasoline)
founder, v.
and n.
to sink, as in a ship; the creator of something (e.g., the founder of the business)
flounder, n., v. a type of fish (but also the widely-used bastardized version of founder meaning sink); to splash, thrash, struggle
grisly, adj. ghastly
grizzly, adj. type of brown bear; grayish (from grizzled)
hare-brained, adj. foolish, silly, reckless (as in an idea thought up by a rabbit or hare)
hair-brained, adj. incorrect for "hare-brained"
herd, n., v. mass of animals; to move a group of animals (e.g., to herd cows)
heard, v. past tense of to hear
"hide nor hair," n. not even a glimpse of something (e.g., not seeing a glimpse of skin or fur)
"hide nor hare", n. incorrect for "hide nor hair"
hoard, v. to obsessively gather and amass
horde, n. large disorganized number, as in an unruly mob of marauders
"home in", v. to locate (e.g., the GPS signal let them home in on the target)
"hone in", v. incorrect for "home in" (to hone is to sharpen a knife blade)
imply, v. to intentionally give an impression (e.g., he implied she was guilty)
infer, v. to reach a conclusion from given information (e.g., he inferred she was guilty from the cop's hint)
"intents and purposes" for all aims and goals
"intense and purposes" incorrect for "intents and purposes"
it's contraction for "it is" or "it has"
its possessive of it (e.g., its tire was flat)
lay, v. to put down (e.g., lay it down there); also, past tense of lie (e.g., yesterday he lay down for a nap at noon)
laid, v. past tense of to lay (e.g., he laid the book down earlier); informal, to receive sex (e.g., he got laid)
lie, v., n. to recline (e.g., I will lie down), to tell an un-truth or the un-truth itself
let's contraction for "let us"
lets, v. to allow, give permission (e.g., he lets his dog run free)
load, n. or v. burden, mass of something; or to fill (e.g., load a truck)
lode, n. vein of valuable mineral (e.g., mother-lode of gold)
loath, adj. disinclined, unwilling, reluctant (e.g., I am loath to go)
loathe, v. to detest (e.g., I loathe politicians)
loose, adj., v. untied group (e.g. loose coins), euphemism for promiscuous (e.g., a loose woman), or to set free (e.g., he loosed the dogs of war)
lose, v. to fail to win, fail to keep
nauseated, adj. a person who is queasy (e.g., he was nauseated by the murder scene)
nauseous, adj. disgusting, something that induces queasiness (e.g., the nauseous sight)
"pastime", n. a hobby, a way to spend time (e.g., jigsaw puzzles were a favorite pastime)
"past time", n. a period already over; often incorrect for "pastime"
passed, v. to move beyond something (e.g., a car passed a truck), or to die (e.g., he passed away)
past, n. a time not in the present or future
peak, n. top, tip, pinnacle (e.g., of a mountain or experience)
peek, v. to glimpse (e.g., he peeked around the corner)
pique, n. annoyance (e.g., his pique at being tricked was boundless)
"per se" Latin, in itself, intrinsically
"per say" incorrect for "per se"
pore, poring, v. to examine closely (e.g., he pored over the diary)
pour, pouring, v. to empty a container of a liquid or granular solid
quash, v. to subdue, strike down, disparage (e.g., he quashed the silly suggestion)
squash, v. to compress (e.g., the cushion was squashed by the heavy weight); often used incorrectly for "quash"
quiet, adj. not loud, silent, motionless
quite, adv. very, completely
rain, n. water droplets falling from clouds
reign, n. a royal person's period on the throne (e.g., the reign of Queen Elizabeth)
rein, n, or v. the leather straps connected to a horse's bridle, or to curb (e.g., he reined in the impulsive rookie)
sank, v. past tense of sink (this past tense has been widely abandoned)
sunk, v. past perfect tense of sink (e.g., we have sunk the enemy's fleet); widely misused instead of sank for past tense of sink (incorrect examples: "he sunk the proposal" or "he sunk down on the couch")
scene, n. setting
seen, v. past perfect tense of see (e.g., I have seen the future)
shone, v. past tense of to shine (e.g., the sun shone brightly)
shown, v. past perfect tense of verb to show (e.g., I have shown him how to do it)
shudder, v. to tremble
shutter, v. to close off with shutters, as in a window or (metaphorically) an expression
straight, adj. not curved, not misleading; heterosexual
strait, n. a narrow passage (e.g., the Strait of Gibraltar), a challenging situation to navigate
taught, v. past tense of to teach
taunt, v. to tease or ridicule (often used incorrectly for "taut")
taut, adj. tense/filled with tension, as in a rope or moment
there, adj. indicating location
their, pron. possessive pronoun
they're contraction of "they are"
throes, n. extreme emotional state (e.g., he was in the throes of grief)
throws, v. to toss (e.g., he throws the ball to the catcher)
to, prep. connect with (e.g., bring it to me)
too, adj. very (e.g., it was too bright) or also (e.g., she came too)
two, n. the integer after one
"toe the line", v. phrase meaning to abide by a rule (from racers lining up at a starting line)
"tow the line", v. to pull with a rope; often incorrect for "toe the line"
tortuous, adj. winding, twisting (e.g., the tortuous mountain roads)
torturous, adj. like torture (e.g., the painful medical procedure was torturous)
who's contraction of "who is"
whose possessive of who (e.g., whose car is that?)
you're contraction of "you are"
your possessive of you (e.g., it is your car)

Updated February 13, 2023